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Conjugation Configurations

When we considered complex-valued signals and second-order statistics, we ended up with two kinds of parameters: non-conjugate and conjugate. So we have the non-conjugate autocorrelation, which is the expected value of the normal second-order lag product in which only one of the factors is conjugated (consistent with the normal definition of variance for complex-valued random variables),

and the conjugate autocorrelation, which is the expected value of the second-order lag product in which neither factor is conjugated

The complex-valued Fourier-series amplitudes of these functions of time are the non-conjugate and conjugate cyclic autocorrelation functions, respectively.

I never explained why both the non-conjugate and conjugate functions are needed. In this post, I rectify that omission. The reason for the many different choices of conjugated factors in higher-order cyclic moments and cumulants is also provided.

The reason we need to consider various numbers of conjugated and un-conjugated terms in our moments and cumulants is that we desire to represent all of our signals and data as complex-valued random processes (complex signals). I’ll repeat this later, but a powerful reason to use complex-valued discrete-time processes is that they can represent real sampled RF signals using a sampling rate that is independent of the carrier frequency of the signal. Only the occupied bandwidth of the RF signal matters when representing an RF signal in terms of a lowpass complex-valued process.

Let’s take this step by step.

Suppose we have a simple real-valued radio-frequency signal, which is just a real-valued message modulated by (multiplied by) a real-valued sine wave,

The message signal is real, and so has a symmetric PSD. Here is a numerical example:

I’ve denoted the width of the PSD for as . Throughout this post we assume that the carrier frequency is much greater than , so that the symmetric PSD of the real signal contains two well-separated bumps:

This means that each bump could be completely separated from the other using linear time-invariant filters. Now let’s look at the real-valued signal in more detail, with an eye toward expressing it in terms of simpler complex-valued components.

Using elementary Fourier transform analysis, the signal corresponds to the positive-frequency bump in the PSD of and corresponds to the negative-frequency bump. So suppose we have just one or the other of and . Can we recover ? Sure, recalling that is real here, we can just take the real part of ,

where is an operator that returns the real part of its argument. This must mean that all the statistical information in is available in . An advantage of working with signals like is that they can be frequency shifted to zero frequency, then sampled at a rate equal to (using the basic sampling theorem). The basic sampling rate for is , which can be much much greater than .

Now, let’s look at the statistics of . In particular, let’s look at the expected value of the second-order lag product, which is the autocorrelation function,

We can express this expected value in terms of and ,

Or, in terms of the autocorrelation for the message signal ,

Now, if is cyclostationary (second-order) with cycle frequencies , then will have cycle frequencies

Middle two terms:

First term:

Last term:

For example, if the real signal is a pulse-amplitude modulated (PAM) signal, it will have cycle frequencies , where is the symbol rate of the PAM signal. So the middle two terms above give us those cycle frequencies, the first term gives us (which includes itself), and the last term gives us . BPSK is such a PAM signal.

Quadrature Modulated Signals

The more general case is defined by adding signals in phase quadrature,

where is the inphase component and is the quadrature component of . Again, through the use of Euler’s Formula, we can express this real-valued radio-frequency signal as

As before, we can represent the real signal by the complex envelope signal provided the carrier is much larger than the bandwidths of the inphase and quadrature components. If we want to examine the complete picture of the second-order statistics of , we can do that by looking at the lag product

By multiplying the two terms, we find additive terms corresponding to all of the four possible conjugation configurations:

.

So to obtain all the statistical information for the original signal , we need to obtain the statistical information from each of the distinct conjugation configurations corresponding to the complex signal .

Now, some of the configurations are redundant. For instance, the lag product is just the complex conjugate of the lag product , so you can determine everything about one of these lag products from the other.

This means that in the end, for second-order, we always need to consider the “no conjugations” case as well as the “one conjugation” case , which provide us with the conjugate and non-conjugate cyclic autocorrelation and spectral correlation functions, respectively.

th-Order Moments and Cumulants

When we look at th-order lag products, as we did in the posts on higher-order moments and cumulants, various conjugation configurations come out of the complex-valued signal representation. In general, they are all needed to determine the full suite of cycle frequencies, cyclic moments, and cyclic cumulants for the original real-valued signal. Symmetries again apply, however, so that we can capture the statistical information by using a minimum set of configurations. When all the delays are equal, this becomes particularly easy. For example, for , we may consider only the cases of no conjugations, one conjugation, and two conjugations. The case of three conjugations is covered by the case of one conjugation, and the case of four is covered by the case of none.

Typical Complex-Signal Model

The typical model for a complex-valued communication signal is

where is the complex envelope of the transmitted signal, is called the carrier offset frequency, is some amplitude factor, and is the residual carrier phase.

The carrier offset frequency is the result of imperfectly downconverting (frequency shifting) the RF signal to zero frequency. Typically, is small compared to the bandwidth of . To understand the statistics of , then, it is required to look at the moments and cumulants of with all possible distinct conjugation configurations.

The next step in such modeling is to add noise, interference, and a propagation channel (such as discrete multipath).

After that, transmitter and receiver impairments can be considered, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves…

And so that’s it. The various conjugation configurations are required to fully study the statistical structure of communication signals that have been (perhaps imperfectly) converted to complex baseband (zero frequency). And it is desired to work with complex baseband signals because they require small sampling rates compared to the RF or even the intermediate-frequency (IF) signals. In the end, we can blame the existence of the various conjugation configurations on the desire to work with complex numbers.

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16 thoughts on “Conjugation Configurations”

wahibasays:

first i would like to thank you for this much interesstant blog,
i have two ambiguities if possible to clarify:
– to calculate the cyclic autocorrelation function do we need both conjugate and non-conjugate terms of it to get a final result or just one is enough?
– i tried to calculate the folowing function for the code you provided of bpsk signal but get all ones result: f=y(t)*y(t+tau)

to calculate the cyclic autocorrelation function do we need both conjugate and non-conjugate terms of it to get a final result or just one is enough?

To calculate the “non-conjugate cyclic autocorrelation”, you need to have one factor conjugated, as in x(t)x^*(t+tau). To calculate the “conjugate cyclic autocorrelation” you need to have no conjugated factors, as in x(t)x(t+tau). To find the cyclic autocorrelation for the corresponding real-valued signal (x(t) is complex valued), you’ll need both the non-conjugate and conjugate cyclic autocorrelation functions, but most people don’t want to consider the real-valued signal.

i tried to calculate the folowing function for the code you provided of bpsk signal but get all ones result: f=y(t)*y(t+tau)

The code I posted at https://cyclostationary.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/make_rect_bpsk.doc produces the BPSK signal in a MATLAB variable named y_of_t. Is that what you mean by “y(t)”? y_of_t contains the rectangular-pulse BPSK signal, shifted by 0.05 Hz, and added to a small amount of noise. It is a vector, and so y_of_t*y_of_t will cause a MATLAB multiplication error. Let me know more details about what you tried…

i considered your code as a example but change some parameters, and then i calculated the CAF (cyclic autocorrelation function) using the estimator of dantadawté and giannakis and got the figure attached.
please, i need to know what is the relationship between conjugate and non-conjugate cyclic autocorrelation for real valued signals?
for the product f=y(t)*y(t+tau), i did an Element-wise multiplication as the following:

please, i need to know what is the relationship between conjugate and non-conjugate cyclic autocorrelation for real valued signals?

For a real-valued signal x(t), the non-conjugate and conjugate cyclic autocorrelation functions are identical.
The non-conjugate and conjugate spectral correlation functions are identical too, of course.

Regarding your function fun_tau(), and your earlier question about “get all ones”, if you modified my code so that the signal y is the noise-free rectangular-pulse BPSK signal, with no carrier shift applied, then for some values of tau you should get all ones. So I still need to know what y and tau are in the call to fun_tau().

Also, I don’t see the figure. Did you try to post it along with the comment?

my y is the noise free rect_pulse BPSK with the following modification :
carr=exp(sqrt(-1)*2*pi*f0*t);
and
t=0:T_bit*num_bits-1;
t=t*Te; % Te is the sampling period wich was not figuring in the code you provide
and for the set of lag : tau=-10*Te:Te:10*Te;

In my posted code, Te=1. You don’t need to carry the variable Te around when doing these kinds of calculations. It is sufficient to do all estimations using Te=1. Then, if you want to graph, say, |S_x^a(f)| versus f, you can simply scale the normalized-frequency vector f_norm by 1/Te.

Suppose we used N samples to estimate the PSD S_x^0(f). Then our normalized-frequency vector is [-0.5:(1/N):0.5). Our physical-frequency vector is then [-0.5:(1/N):0.5)*(1/Te).

You don’t want to use my code to produce the baseband BPSK signal with Te=1 and then mix that with other signals (like the carrier) which are formed with Te =/= 1.

I see that WordPress allows one to insert a URL that points to an image or video or whatever using the ‘img’ button in the row of buttons above the comment window. But I determined you can’t just paste an image into a comment.

I just want to confirm that the equation one is non-conjuate autocorrelation because of there is no conjuate part, and equation (2) is conjuate autocorrelation, right? Because I saw the conjuate spectral correlation and non-conjuate spectral correlation is defined like this way.

Equation (1) of the post you linked to is the non-conjugate cyclic periodogram, which is often called just the cyclic periodogram. Equation (2) of the post is the non-conjugate spectral correlation function, which is a limiting form of the averaged non-conjugate cyclic periodogram.

The conjugate cyclic periodogram is (8) and the conjugate spectral correlation function is (7).